Overview
- Mexico City’s government, which outlined the plan Wednesday, set aside 5,183 million pesos to put most projects into service between April and the first week of May.
- Metro Line 2 is in a 1,500 million peso overhaul that adds four trains, upgrades tracks, power and stations, and installs 800 cameras, with officials guaranteeing completion before the World Cup.
- The Tren Ligero upgrade brings a new Taxqueña terminal, 17 new trains, station fixes and a rail control system to cut trips by up to 30 percent in early May.
- Electric bus service expands across the city, with the airport–Reforma Metrobús branch on Line 4 already running since January 30 and new May launches that include RTP’s Centrobús run by women drivers and trolleybus routes on Line 14 and the Chapultepec–Ciudad Universitaria corridor.
- Transfers and access improve through upgrades at key transfer hubs and wayfinding at the airport and San Lázaro, with those works finishing in early June, alongside 34 kilometers of new bike lanes linking the center to the south.